Google Glass moviegoer detained for hours on suspicion of piracy

A man attending a movie on Saturday at an AMC theater in Columbus, Ohio was pulled from a theater, detained, and questioned for over two hours by US Dept. of Homeland Security special agents tasked with fighting piracy - all for wearing Google Glass.

The man, who asked to remain anonymous, said that about an hour
into a 19:45 EST showing of ‘Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit,’
a man who flashed an official-looking badge “yank[ed] the
Google Glass” off his face, asking him to exit the theater.
The man was attending the film with his wife at the AMC theater
at Easton Town Center.

Two officers then ordered him to hand over his wallet and both
his work and personal cell phones, according to tech site The
Gadgeteer. The man said he was questioned for 20 or 30 minutes on
why he was attempting to record the film. Because he had recently
added prescription lenses to his Google Glass, the 35-year-old
man wore them into the movie. The device has a voice-activated
computer and does have an attached camera.

“I said, ‘Want me to prove I’m not recording the movie? It’s
very easy,’” the man told the Columbus Dispatch on Tuesday.
He said he indicated to the agents that Google Glass has a USB
port where the device can be reviewed. "There’s nothing but
pictures of my wife and my dog on it,” he told the agents.

The agents declined, electing to detain and question the man in a
downstairs “management” office for around two hours,
repeatedly asking the same questions again and again. The man
says he was asked who he was working for, how many computers he
had at home, why he had attempted to record the film, and
“why don’t I just give up the guy up the chain.” The
agents, of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
finally reviewed the device to see there was no material of
interest. He was allowed to leave just after 23:00 EST, with two
free movie passes.

The Columbus Dispatch learned the agents were from ICE’s Homeland
Security Investigations unit, which is tasked with combating
piracy and counterfeit goods.

ICE spokesman Khaalid Walls said the unit and local authorities
“briefly interviewed a man suspected of using an electronic
recording device to record a film.”

“The man, who voluntarily answered questions, confirmed to
authorities that the suspected recording device was also a pair
of prescription eye glasses in which the recording function had
been inactive. No further action was taken,” Walls said in a
statement.

An AMC spokesman said the Motion Picture Association of America
(MPAA) was at the same theater last weekend when the man wearing
Google Glass was pointed out. An MPAA representative flagged the
man thought to be recording the film for the Department of
Homeland Security.

“While we’re huge fans of technology and innovation, wearing
a device that has the capability to record video is not
appropriate at the movie theater,” AMC’s Ryan Noonan said.

The MPAA said in a statement that it has not seen any reason to
believe that Google Glass poses a threat that could lead to film
piracy.

The man said he acquired Google Glass in November during Google’s
exclusive offer, known as the Explorer program. He and around
30,000 others have paid US$1,500 to test-run the device before it
is released to the public later this year. In addition, the
prescription lenses cost him $600.

He said he regrets wearing Glass to a movie, despite having done
so in the recent past at the same theater without issue.

“I realize it’s stupid to have a device with a camera pointed
at the screen,” he said. “But I didn’t even think of it,
because I don’t use Google Glass to record other people.”